Sex
trafficking victims found at illicit Texas social sites, report
finds
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[September 08, 2016]
By Ellen Wulfhorst
NEW YORK (Thomson Reuters Foundation) -
More than 1,000 women and girls have been apparent victims of sex
trafficking in illicit cantinas in the United States that largely
operate beyond the reach of law enforcement, the anti-slavery group
Polaris said on Thursday.
Half of the trafficking cases in cantinas arose in Houston, Texas, a
city near the Mexican border with a large Latino population, Polaris
said in a study tracking calls to its trafficking hotlines from over
the past decade.
Cantinas, social gathering spots popular in Latino communities, may
disguise the cost of commercial sex in very high drink prices, and
women are forced to flirt and drink with patrons, the study's author
Tessa Couture told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
Cantinas also may limit who enters and may not be open to the
general public, the report said.
Overall, hotlines run by Polaris got reports of 201 cases of sex and
labor trafficking, involving 1,300 potential victims at cantinas and
bars in 20 U.S. states from 2007 to 2016.
More than half the victims were underage, it said.
At one illicit cantina in Houston, some victims were forced to have
sex as often as 50 times a day, it said. The cantina owner,
convicted of sex trafficking, conspiracy and other charges, was
sentenced to life in prison earlier this year.
While cases of trafficking in brothels have been the subject of
high-profile prosecutions, only a small number of prosecutions have
focused on cantinas, mostly in Houston, the report said.
Cases can be hard to investigate and prosecute because traffickers
and owners may hide their ownership of cantinas or liquor licenses,
and because victims are too scared to testify in court, afraid that
traffickers will retaliate by hurting their families, Polaris said.
"Those organized crime networks reaching back into Mexico and
Central America are very real. People know that there's a very real
possibility their families will be hurt," Couture said.
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Many traffickers are involved in drug cartels or gangs, and victims
often were lured to the United States with job offers or other false
promises, Polaris said.
Both traffickers and victims in the illicit cantinas tended to be
from Mexico or Central America, it said.
The women and girls are intimidated by threats and abuse or forced
into deep debt, and most reported being kept isolated, confined and
monitored by their traffickers, the report said.
Of those who escaped, a third were helped by potential buyers of sex
who found out the victim's circumstances, it said.
Cantina-style cases were reported in California,
Washington, D.C., New York and elsewhere, the report said.
Polaris recommended increased training for law enforcement and
service providers such as healthcare workers, better information
sharing among law enforcement and government agencies, and more
funding for investigations and prosecutions.
(Reporting by Ellen Wulfhorst, editing by Alisa Tang. Please credit
the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson
Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking,
land rights and climate change. Visit http://news.trust.org)
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